Date
4-18-2025
Department
Rawlings School of Divinity
Degree
Doctor of Education in Christian Leadership (EdD)
Chair
Michael Grayston
Keywords
Stress, lead pastor, marriage, balance, family, leadership, ministry, self-care, mental health
Disciplines
Christianity | Educational Leadership
Recommended Citation
Bergeron, Sherri Lee, "Lead Pastor Stress: A Quantitative Study of the Effects on Mental Health, Marriage, Family, and the Church" (2025). Doctoral Dissertations and Projects. 6635.
https://digitalcommons.liberty.edu/doctoral/6635
Abstract
The church’s lead pastor has many roles and responsibilities, from teaching the Word of the Lord, baptisms, counseling sessions, and leading a staff. These are not the lead pastor’s only role; the majority also have a family, children, and a spouse at home who also need their attention. A balance must be considered between the ministry, family, and marriage. If this balance is off or the pastor becomes overwhelmed with any or all the three, their mental health may suffer and can cause depression and anxiety if not dealt with appropriately (Christianity Today, 2022). Lead pastors, while in ministry, have a deep and intimate bond of Christian love for their staff and congregation (London and Wiseman, 2000). Lead pastors balance this passion with everyday ministry concerns to ensure the well-being of their mental and physical health, but who assists them when they are exhausted and stressed? The purpose of this quantitative study will be to assess and link the mental health stressors of lead pastors in relationship to age and marital status and the effects on their health, marriage, family, and ministry. The participants in this study will come from churches in the Northern Virginia region of all denominational backgrounds and female and male pastors. The participants will be emailed a survey containing a series of questions. The replies will be kept confidential to ensure participants feel open to reply honestly. The research results will define the stress of the lead pastor and areas of self-care regarding mental and physical health, ministry, family, and marriage.